How taking a course works

Discover

Learn

Master

Learn and practice real-world skills and achieve your goals.

Course Description

This course is made up of a small selection of the videos on my site: lsat.totaltestprep.net

I've covered some of the basic aspects behind what you need to know in order to do well on the test. Please check out the videos, and if you'd like more you can visit my site where I offer the entire course, totaling over 20 hours, free for 2 weeks.

If you're looking for tutoring I offer several packages, starting at $60/hr. My tutoring is done solely through an online virtual classroom system with an integrated whiteboard and live audio/video. I've found online tutoring to be much more effective because of the flexibility it offers and because the virtual classroom technology is ideal for explaining the concepts more effectively. If you're interested please check out my site; I offer the first 5 hour of my tutoring risk-free (you only pay for them if you decide to continue the course) so that prospective students can thoroughly evaluate my approach and the online environment.

This video introduces and explains the "false reversal" and "false negative" relationships that a lot of people mistakenly think can also be derived from the conditional relationships that you're presented with.

This is a clip from the video that introduces the basic variation for the 'weaken' questions and explains the step by step method for doing these questions. The question is blurred out because of LSAC license restrictions; obviously in my actual videos the question isn't blurred out.

This is a clip from the video that introduces the first major variations for the 'assumption' question type as well as the step-by-step method for doing them. The question is blurred out because of LSAC license restrictions; obviously in my actual videos the question isn't blurred out.

This is a clip from the video that introduces the 'principle (scenario)' question type and basic variations as well as the step-by-step method for doing them. The question is blurred out because of LSAC license restrictions; obviously in my actual videos the question isn't blurred out.

This is a clip from the video that introduces the 'paradox' question type and basic variations as well as the step-by-step method for doing them. The question is blurred out because of LSAC license restrictions; obviously in my actual videos the question isn't blurred out.

This is a clip from the video that introduces the first major variation of the 'method of reasoning' question type as well as the step-by-step approach for doing them. The question is blurred out because of LSAC license restrictions; obviously in my actual videos the question isn't blurred out.

This is a clip from the video that introduces one of the major question types as well as the step-by-step method for doing them. The question is blurred out because of LSAC license restrictions; obviously in my actual videos the question isn't blurred out.

This is a clip from the video that introduces the dual passage question types and basic variations as well as the step-by-step method for doing them. The question is blurred out because of LSAC license restrictions; obviously in my actual videos the question isn't blurred out.

Instructor Biography

My name's Milan and I'm the LSAT tutor here at Total Test Prep. My brother and I had initially started by working for the major test prep companies over 7 years ago, but then we quickly realized that those approaches were largely ineffective. So we ventured out on our own and re-designed test prep from the ground up.

Me? I like the usual things: babies, whiskers on kittens, the spring breeze. After graduating from Cornell nearly 10 years ago with a degree in philosophy I spent a couple of beautiful years wandering Europe working as an English Teacher in Barcelona, Paris, and Marseillle (with occasional extra money hustled through onlike poker). Back in the States and with a 99th% on the LSAT under my belt but a dampened desire to go law school teaching the test was the logical choice. I've been doing it and making my own prep materials since.

When I'm not teaching I'm reading sociology textbooks and histories of the Spanish Civil War and making short animated movies to delight and instruct my fellow man.

Reviews

LSAT

Average Rating

4.5

4 ratings

Details

5 Stars

2

4 Stars

2

3 Stars

0

2 Stars

0

1 Stars

0

Elva

a year ago

Clear explanations

Very well explained. I have taken the LSAT twice and unfortunately, I have not gotten a high enough score. I keep trying.